FRESH OFF THE FARMFrom herbs to ice cream, the area’s agricultural output is best sampled at the source.

Eats For sage-blossom honey, limited-edition wines and apricot preserves, stop by the sleek and sun-filled Bell Street Farm. Take away grilled-cheese sandwiches or eat them on the back patio, where rosemary and thyme from the garden perfume the air. 406 Bell Street, Los Alamos; (805) 344-4609; bellstreetfarm.com.

Olive Oil Pasolivo‘s popular olive oil is grown on 45 acres near Paso Robles with a 6,000-tree orchard and a tasting room where you can sip the liquid gold neat or eat it with country bread. Standouts include the tangerine-infused oil and the Pasolivo blend, made from five Tuscan varietals. 8530 Vineyard Drive, Paso Robles; (805) 227-0186; pasolivo.com.

Sheep’s Milk Ice Cream Alexis Negranti and her husband, Wade, had never milked an animal when they bought their starter flock of sheep last year. Now their ice creams, made with milk from their 60 ewes at Negranti Dairy, are talked about as far south as Los Angeles. Visit the Paso Robles farm by appointment; (805) 801-3847; negrantidairy.com.

Lavender During bloom season (in May and June), tour the purple fields at Central Coast Lavender, then sample the lavender cookies and lemonade at the shop, which also sells the farm’s lavender honey and essential oil. 6630 North Star Lane, Paso Robles; (805) 467-3500; centralcoastlavender.com.

Walnut Oil The family-owned Limerock Orchards began pressing walnut oil a few years ago and has since introduced a line of products ranging from walnut brittle to walnut pesto. You can taste all the nutty goodness at the 23-acre farm. 6996 Peachy Canyon Road, Paso Robles; 805-238-6887; limerockorchards.com.

Mike and Kelsey Sheofsky spent their childhoods camping (even their first date involved a tent), so it was only natural that the husband and wife started Shelter Co., a pop-up luxury camping company, this spring. Their canvas tents — furnished with full-size beds, side tables, lamps, leather butterfly chairs and Pendleton blankets — can be pitched anywhere along the California coast, including campsites, wineries, coastal plots scouted by the pair, even in backyards. “We’re attracting a lot of people who have never been camping before,” says Kelsey, a longtime event planner. Shelter Co. will provide a camping box with s’mores, whiskey and a flashlight, as well as an on-site butler to grill burgers and build fires. From $2,000 for two nights; (415) 967-3630; shelter-co.com.

A version of this article appears in print on 09/23/2012, on page M282 of the NewYork edition with the headline: High Camp.